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Mass Sack Hit Sun Newspaper, Top Staff Of The Editorial Department Affected

Mass Sack Hit Sun Newspaper

The Sun Newspaper was on Thursday hit by a mass sack, with top staff of the Editorial Department affected.

 

Barely a week after conferring Sun Man of The Year back to back to the Governor of Rivers State, Nyesom Wike, the Publisher of the newspaper and former Governor of Abia State, Orji Uzor Kalu, has embarked on the mass sack of top Editors of the paper.

 

 

According to reports among those affected by the sack was the Deputy Managing Director, Steve Nwosu.

 

Also Read: Okowa Commissions Multi-Billion Dollar Steel Company In Aladja

 

Three General Managers; the Editor of the Sunday title, Alhaji Fatai Oladehinde; Ikenna Emehu; Editor, Sporting Sun, John Joshua Akanji; Yinka Fabowale; and Emeka Okoroyanwu, were also affected in the mass sack.

 

There had been no official reaction to the development as at press time.

 

 

Read Also: Horror: Villagers Find Human Arm And Leg Inside Belly Of Massive Crocodile After Killing It 

 

Police say they found some of the remains of the plantation worker inside the huge beast’s stomach
 
A human leg and arm have been found inside the belly of a huge crocodile suspected of mauling a man to death in Borneo, Indonesian police have said.
Authorities shot and killed the 20-foot-long crocodile close to a riverbank where a local palm oil plantation worker had gone missing two days earlier, with only his motorbike and sandals found at the site, they said.
The search ended Thursday when 36-year-old Andi Aso Erang’s lifeless body – missing two limbs – was discovered floating in a different part of the river in Kalimantan, the Indonesian part of Borneo.
Police said they spotted a crocodile nearby and killed it.
‘Inside the crocodile’s stomach, we found the left arm and a leg that we believe belonged to the victim,’ local police chief Teddy Ristiawan said.
The victim’s wife said he had left home to hunt for clams they could eat.
‘I never expected he would end up in a terrible situation like this,’ said Anisa, who like many Indonesians goes by one name.
In 2016, a Russian tourist was killed by a crocodile in the Raja Ampat islands, a popular diving site in the east of the archipelago.
Human-animal conflicts are rampant in Indonesia, especially in areas where the clearing of rainforest to make way for palm oil plantations is destroying animals’ habitats and bringing them into closer contact with humans.

 

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